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Guest Swan Swan H
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Posted


Sweet feature.

Willie Mays would be the oldest living Met to play his first game with the team in the '70s, by virtue of joining the team just after his 41st birthday, relatively early in the decade, and also by not being dead at the present time.


Posted


Looks like Frank Thomas, Hobie Landrith, and Joe Ginsberg have been in the top 20 every day since the beginning of Metdom.

Ginsberg isn't on the UMDB list for 4/11/62 and 4/12/62 although he's an original Met. Is the rule that a player isn't considered a Met in the UMDB until he's actually gotten into a game?

Great feature.


Posted


Great list, but you left out El Duque.[/quote:1s7iyuka]
And Julio Franco.

Joe Ginsberg and Dave Hillman jump to the top of my "guys to send autograph requests to" list.


Posted


If it was funny, I'd say it. Like Alka-Seltzer, cupcake, pickles, chicken -- words with the "k" sound. You don't get laughs with tomatoes or lettuce. Or Frumpies.

--Willy Clark, The Sunshine Boys

They both have the "k" sound, but Julio Franco doesn't strike me as nearly as funny as El Duque.

Then again, Ed Bouchee doesn't strike me as nearly as old as Julio Franco.


Posted


Ginsberg isn't on the UMDB list for 4/11/62 and 4/12/62 although he's an original Met. Is the rule that a player isn't considered a Met in the UMDB until he's actually gotten into a game?[/quote:3h4a5kze]

Yup.


Posted


Looks like Frank Thomas, Hobie Landrith, and Joe Ginsberg have been in the top 20 every day since the beginning of Metdom.

Ginsberg isn't on the UMDB list for 4/11/62 and 4/12/62 although he's an original Met. Is the rule that a player isn't considered a Met in the UMDB until he's actually gotten into a game?

Great feature.[/quote:21xted5q]


The Mets signed Hobie Landrith to a minor league contract to tutor Thole


Guest sharpie
Guests
Posted


Home come Willie Mays doesn't get his middle name (Howard) on the list?


Posted


I read where he denied that his middle name was "Howard" and that his given name was simply "Willie Mays."

I don't know if that's true or not, nor do I remember where I read it, but I guess I was convinced enough at the time to remove the Howard from his name.


Posted


I read where he denied that his middle name was "Howard" and that his given name was simply "Willie Mays."

I don't know if that's true or not, nor do I remember where I read it, but I guess I was convinced enough at the time to remove the Howard from his name.
Posted


Here, from his autobiography, Willie Mays, My Life In and Out of Baseball as told to Charles Einstein:

Take the record book. It doesn't even have my name right. My name is Willie Mays. It's not Willie Howard Mays, or Willie H. Mays, or any of those three names with a "Jr." after it. My real name is Willie Mays.

My father's father was Walter Mays, a pitcher in Negro ball in Tuscaloosa around the turn of the century. My father is William Howard Mays, because William Howard Taft was president when he was born.
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